I do sometimes wonder how (if) you actually ever get anything done, John .... Never have I known someone drive a conversation in such circles, exploring every inanity
That may well be true of some of my writings, but I really don't think it is a fair accusation in this case. In my OP, I asked two simple questions ...
"Does this really mean that there is a 4-6 [week] period during which one theoretically cannot drive the car legally, because the 'previous' plate is 'invalid' and the new one not yet available?"
".... and ..."
"Furthermore, if one does use the car during that period, when should one inform one's insurer in order to ensure that the vehicle remains covered?"
The first of those questions is easily the most important one, and no-one has yet attempted to answer it, and no-one has really given a usefull answer to the second one.
I don’t particularly mind what you do to resolve this latest first world problem you’ve fallen into ...
... I've told you what I (personally) will 'do'- either 'nothing' (i.e. keep the private plate) or else apply common sense and carry on driving the car immediately after requesting retention of the private plate.
.... but I don’t think your “I never bothered to contact the DVLA your worship, as I wanted ignorance to be my defence” will wash, if you find yourself in court
It certainly wouldn't 'wash' if I worded it like that! However, it might stand a much better chance of 'washing if it were along the lines of "... like countless people before me, I applied commen sense and assumed that I was allowed to carry on using my car after requesting retention of the private plate (whilst that plate was still being displayed) until such a time as DVLA provided me with the means of replacing the plate"
No, because we haven’t got there yet. The first MS4… registered vehicle will be in early 2040.
I wrote "MS4", not "MS4...". There will never be a plate in the current series with the first part of (just) "MS4" ... come 2040, the first one will be MS40, followed by MS45, MS41, MS46 etc. etc.
I know a couple, Julian and Helen, who drive a 2018 Tiguan with JO04HEL as a number plate; they regard “Joo for Hel” as a declaration of affection for each other, another valid reason for having 4 in that position on a plate. ... Having a plate 14 years older than their car doesn’t seem to offend their sense of vanity either..
Fair enough. I'd overlooked the possibility that the 4 could be taken to phonetically represent "for" and for the zero to phonetically represent an "O"-sound - so, yes, I suppose that the plate currently sitting on my car could have, to someone, represented "Smo for XYZ", where "Smo" was some or of 'pet name'/whatever and XYZ was someone's initials/whatever (it is an essentially unpronounceable group of three consonants, so unlikely to be representing 'a word').
However, as I've written, that's all just about curiosity, and nothing to do with my questions - the private plate which I have is the private plate which I have, regardless of how it came about.